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poetry
Fruitlands
Kate Colby
Counter Daemons
Roberto Harrison
Animate, Inanimate Aims
Brenda Iijima
The Mudra
Kerri Sonnenberg
Emptied of All Ships
Stacy Szymaszek
>> Euclid Shudders
Mark Tardi
The House Seen from Nowhere
Keith Waldrop
translations
Notebooks 1956-1978
Danielle Collobert
Face Before Against
Isabelle Garron
Four from Japan: Contemporary Poetry & Essays by Women
Kiriu Minashita, Kyong-Mi Park, Ryoko Sekiguchi, Takako Arai
Inner China
Eva Sjödin
Another Kind of Tenderness
Xue Di

Main | Excerpt | Author Bio

euclid shudders

In Mark Tardi's first collection of poetry, Euclid Shudders, there is a distinct vibration between objects and their words, as though each relation were poised on the precipice of its inverse: the pause before the cataclysm. In this weighted space, potential sounds hover as a last breath between inspiration, expiration, and the anticipation of nothing: "on a bridge/ emptied with intertia// so close// canopie jars from beneath."

—E. Tracy Grinnell

Mark Tardi's poetry gives language back to that inanimate mass from which it, and we, originated. Every utterance is an act of configuration and every scribble traces a fleeting delineation between states of being and non-being. Tardi's poems exhale from the apparently insensate and resign the animate to perpetual motion. In this universe of receding matter and pulsing energy, Mark Tardi sets out to locate those "unpronounced angles" which make up the invisible but inextricable geometry of our lives.

—Craig Watson

Euclid might well shudder at how far the line has come. In his wonderfully unruly first book, Mark Tardi composes an isotopic realm of getting and letting go, a kind of chemical algebra of the alleged world as it verges into music.

—Elizabeth Willis